Reassessing the Presidency: The Rise of the Executive State and the Decline of Freedom - Digital Book

Everyone seems to agree that brutal dictators and despotic rulers deserve scorn and worse. But why have historians been so willing to overlook the despotic actions of the United States' own presidents? You can scour libraries from one end to the other and encounter precious few criticisms of America's worst despots

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Digital Book

Everyone seems to agree that brutal dictators and despotic rulers deserve scorn and worse. But why have historians been so willing to overlook the despotic actions of the United States' own presidents? You can scour libraries from one end to the other and encounter precious few criticisms of America's worst despots.

The founders imagined that the president would be a collegial leader with precious little power who constantly faced the threat of impeachment. Today, however, the president orders thousands of young men and women to danger and death in foreign lands, rubber stamps regulations that throw enterprises into upheaval, controls the composition of the powerful Federal Reserve, and manages the priorities millions of swarms of bureaucrats that vex the citizenry in every way.

It is not too much of a stretch to say that the president embodies the Leviathan state as we know it. Or, more precisely, it is not an individual president so much as the very institution of the presidency that has been the major impediment of liberty. The presidency as the founders imagined it has been displaced by democratically ratified serial despotism. And, for that reason, it must be stopped.

Every American president seems to strive to make the historians' A-list by doing big and dramatic things—wars, occupations, massive programs, tyrannies large and small—in hopes of being considered among the "greats" such as Lincoln, Wilson, and FDR. They always imagine themselves as honored by future generations: the worse their crimes, the more the accolades.

Well, the free ride ends with Reassessing the Presidency: The Rise of the Executive State and the Decline of Freedom, edited by John Denson.

This remarkable volume (825 pages including index and bibliography) is the first full-scale revision of the official history of the U.S. executive state. It traces the progression of power exercised by American presidents from the early American Republic up to the eventual reality of the power-hungry Caesars which later appear as president in American history. Contributors examine the usual judgments of the historical profession to show the ugly side of supposed presidential greatness.

The mission inherent in this undertaking is to determine how the presidency degenerated into the office of American Caesar. Did the character of the man who held the office corrupt it, or did the power of the office, as it evolved, corrupt the man? Or was it a combination of the two? Was there too much latent power in the original creation of the office as the Anti-Federalists claimed? Or was the power externally created and added to the position by corrupt or misguided men?

There's never been a better guide to everything awful about American presidents. No, you won't get the civics text approach of see no evil. Essay after essay details depredations that will shock you, and wonder how American liberty could have ever survived in light of the rule of these people.

• Introduction by John V. Denson
• Rating Presidential Performance, by Richard Vedder and Lowell Gallaway
• George Washington: An Image and Its Influence, by David Gordon
• Thomas Jefferson: Classical-Liberal Statesman of the Old Republic, by H. Arthur Scott Trask
• Supreme Court as Accomplice: Judicial Backing for a Despotic Presidency, by Marshall L. DeRosa
• The Electoral College as a Restraint on American Democracy: Its Evolution from Washington to Jackson, by Randall G. Holcombe
• Martin Van Buren: The American Gladstone, by Jeffrey Rogers Hummel
• Abraham Lincoln and the Triumph of Mercantilism, by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
• Lincoln and the First Shot: A Study of Deceit and Deception, by John V. Denson
• President Andrew Johnson: Tribune of States’ Rights, by H. Arthur Scott Trask and Carey Roberts
• William McKinley: Architect of the American Empire, by Joseph R. Stromberg
• Theodore Roosevelt and the Modern Presidency, by Thomas E. Woods, Jr
• The Use and Abuse of Antitrust From Cleveland to Clinton: Causes and Consequences, by George Bittlingmayer
• From Opponent of Empire to Career Opportunist: William Howard Taft as Conservative Bureaucrat. by William Marina
• Woodrow Wilson’s Revolution Within the Form, by Richard M. Gamble
• Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal: From Economic Fascism to Pork-Barrel Politics, by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
• Roosevelt and the First Shot: A Study of Deceit and Deception, by John V. Denson
• Despotism Loves Company: The Story of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Josef Stalin. by Yuri N. Maltsev and Barry Dean Simpson
• Harry S. Truman: Advancing the Revolution, by Ralph Raico
• From Kennedy’s "New Economics" to Nixon’s "New Economic Policy": Monetary Inflation and the March of Economic Fascism, by Joseph T. Salerno
• The Managerial President, by Paul Gottfried
• The President as Social Engineer, by Michael Levin
• The Impossibility of Limited Government and the Prospects for a Second American Revolution, by Hans-Hermann Hoppe
• The American President: From Cincinnatus to Caesar, by Clyde N. Wilson